Court File No.: A-262-17
FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL
B E T W E E N :
JEREMY COOPERSTOCKAppellant
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UNITED AIRLINES, INC.Respondent
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SAMUELSON-GLUSHKO CANADIAN INTERNET POLICY & PUBLIC INTERNET CLINIC (CIPPIC) and CANADIAN CIVIL LIBERTIES ASSOCIATION (CCLA)
Interveners
MEMORANDUM OF FACT AND LAW OF THE INTERVENER,CANADIAN CIVIL LIBERTIES ASSOCIATION
LERNERS LLP
130 Adelaide Street WestSuite 2400Toronto, ON M5H 3P5
Mark J. Freiman LS#: 24960BTel: 416.601.2370Fax: [email protected]
Rebecca Shoom LS#: 68578GTel: 416.601.2382Fax: [email protected]
Counsel for the Intervener,Canadian Civil Liberties Association
TO: THE REGISTRARFederal Court of Appeal
TO: PALIARE ROLAND ROSENBERG ROTHSTEIN LLP155 Wellington Street West35th FloorToronto ON M5V 3H1Fax: 416.646.4301
Ren Bucholz LS#: 60376PTel: 416.646.6303Email: [email protected]
Andrew Lokan LS#: 31629QTel: 416.646.4324Email: [email protected]
Counsel for the Appellant
AND TO: GOWLING WLG (CANADA) LLP160 Elgin StreetSuite 2600Ottawa ON K1P 1C3Fax: 613.563.9869
Jay ZakaïbTel: 613.783.8806Email: [email protected]
Frédéric LussierTel: 613.783.8987Email: [email protected]
Counsel for the Respondent
TO: SAMUELSON-GLUSHKO CANADIAN INTERNET POLICY & PUBLIC INTEREST CLINIC (CIPPIC)University of Ottawa57 Louis Pasteur StreetOttawa, ON K1N 6N5David Fewer, LSCU #45307CTel: 613.562.5800 ext. 2558Fax: [email protected]
Counsel for the Intervener
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
PART I – FACTS............................................................................................................. 1A. Overview .......................................................................................................... 1B. Statement of Facts ........................................................................................... 2C. Phelan J.’s Decision......................................................................................... 3
PART II – ISSUES........................................................................................................... 3
PART III – LAW AND ARGUMENT................................................................................. 4A. Expressive Freedom is a Core Value of the Copyright Act .............................. 4B. The Fair Dealing Provisions Codify Users’ Rights............................................ 5C. Interpreting Fair Dealing Requires Consideration of Charter Values ............... 8
i) Parody is an inherently expressive act...................................................... 8ii) The Ambiguity of the Fair Dealing Provision Requires Consideration of
Charter Values......................................................................................... 9iii) Interpretive Errors Below....................................................................... 11(a) The Six Factors: Purpose .................................................................... 12(b) The Six Factors: Other Factors” .......................................................... 14
D. Proper Interpretation of Fair Dealing.............................................................. 15E. Interpretation of the Trade-Marks Act............................................................. 18
PART IV – ORDER SOUGHT ....................................................................................... 18
PART V: LIST OF AUTHORITIES................................................................................ 19
PART I – FACTS
A. Overview
1. Expressive freedom is a cornerstone value of our society. The law of copyright
has traditionally been understood as encouraging the creation and dissemination of
expressive works by protecting their creators from unauthorized copying. At the same
time, copyright is, by its nature, a statutory restriction of expressive freedom. Unless
balanced by a liberal and robust users’ rights regime, copyright can become a tool of
censorship in the hands of rights owners, suppressing creativity, knowledge, debate,
criticism, and, ultimately, expression.
2. In the Court below, Phelan J. found that the appellant’s website criticizing the
respondent did not amount to fair dealing as a “parody” under the Copyright Act and
therefore constituted an infringement. CCLA’s submissions respond primarily to this
finding by Phelan J. but will also briefly address his findings with respect to the Trade-
Marks Act. Intellectual property rights are designed to benefit society by encouraging the
creation and dissemination of expression and the communication of information. They are
not intended - and should not be used - as tools of censorship and suppression of
criticism.
3. CCLA’s position can be summarized as follows:
(a) The contemporary analysis and application of copyright law requires a “balance between promoting the public interest in the encouragement and dissemination of works of art and intellect and obtaining a just reward for the creator”. 1
(b) Users’ rights are an essential part of furthering the public interest objectives of the Copyright Act. “Fair dealing”, which allows users to engage in some activities that might otherwise amount to copyright infringement “must not be interpreted restrictively”. 2.
1 Théberge v. Galérie d’Art du Petit Champlain Inc., [2002] 2 SCR 336, para. 362 Socan v. Bell Canada [2012] 2 SCR 326, para. 11
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(c) The Charter value of expressive freedom must be considered in interpreting and applying the fair dealing provision because of the nature of the interests that the Copyright Act protects, and the purposes of the provision itself,
(d) The fair dealing provision provides no definition of its listed categories, creating interpretive ambiguity which requires consideration of Chartervalues.
(e) In interpreting parody and the fair dealing factors, Phelan J. failed to read the “fair dealing in parody” provision in its entire context, harmoniously with the scheme of the Act and the intention of Parliament and particularly, in light of Charter values. 3
(f) Phelan J.’s statutory interpretation errors result in an artificial, overly restrictive interpretation of parody and fair dealing which favours the rights of copyright owners over the public interest, stifles free expression, hinders cultural growth, and turns copyright into an instrument of censorship.
(g) Phelan J.’s approach to the plaintiff’s claims under the Trade-Marks Act also fails to consider how the relevant subject matter and policy rationales underlying the Act require consideration of Charter values and, in particular, expressive freedom.
B. Statement of Facts
4. The CCLA accepts the appellant’s statement of facts. It draws particular attention
to the following facts, illustrating the parodic nature and intent of the website:
(a) The appellant titled his website “UNTIED” to highlight what he perceived to be the disconnection and disorganization of the respondent;4
(b) From the launch of his website in 1997 through 2011, the appellant updated the design of his website and its logo on several occasions to parody the appearance of the respondent’s website and logo, which was found not to violate the respondent’s intellectual property rights;5
(c) The appellant redesigned his website and its logo to again mirror the placement of the respondent’s logo on its website following the respondent’s August 2010 unveiling of its new brand name and logo. The redesigned logo added a “frowny face” onto the respondent’s globe logo;6
3 CCH v. Law Society of Upper Canada, [2004] 1 SCR 339, para. 94 Memorandum of Fact and Law of the Moving Party/Appellant, Jeremy Cooperstock (“Appellant’s
Memorandum”) at para 12.5 Appellant’s Memorandum at paras 14, 16.6 Appellant’s Memorandum at paras 17-18.
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(d) The appellant again redesigned his website and its logo in June 2012 in response to the redesign of the respondent’s website;7
(e) In October 2012, the appellant altered his website by (i) changing the colour of the “T” and “I” in the word “UNTIED”, as well as the “frowny face” on the logo, to red (from blue, like the remainder of the name and logo), (ii) adding a disclaimer at the top of the webpage in black font reading “(This is not the website of United Airlines)”, and (iii) adding a pop-up dialogue box requiring a first-time visitor to acknowledge that he or she understands the website is not the website of the respondent.8
C. Phelan J.’s Decision
5. Phelan J. found that the appellant’s website infringed the respondent’s copyrighted
logos and webpage design. In particular, in the context of a fair dealing analysis, he
concluded that while the appellant’s website constituted dealing for an allowable purpose
- parody - the dealing itself was not “fair”.9
PART II – ISSUES
6. The stated questions on this application engage a fundamental issue: to what
extent should Charter values inform the interpretation and application of Canadian
intellectual property statutes, and in particular, the fair dealing in parody provision of the
Copyright Act?
7. CCLA submits that Charter values – particularly expressive freedom – lie at the
core of the development and interpretation of Canadian intellectual property law.
Expressive freedom should be given significant weight in applying the Copyright Act’s fair
dealing provisions both because of the nature of copyright, and as a matter of statutory
interpretation.
7 Appellant’s Memorandum at para 19.8 Appellant’s Memorandum at para 24.9 United Airlines, Inc. v Cooperstock, 2017 FC 616 at para 141 (“Reasons”).
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PART III – LAW AND ARGUMENT
A. Expressive Freedom is a Core Value of the Copyright Act
8. In the court below, Phelan J. suggested that freedom of speech is not at issue in
this litigation.10 This statement reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of copyright law,
the development of the Copyright Act, and the contemporary understanding of fair
dealing.
9. Expressive freedom is clearly an important concept for understanding the policy
framework of the Copyright Act. The Charter value of expressive freedom informs and
accords with the legislative scheme, object, and intention of the Copyright Act, the
purpose of which is to reward authors who create works of original expression and to
encourage the creation and dissemination of such works in the public interest. As Carys
Craig has explained: "Copyright...encourage[s] the kinds of communicative activity that
lie at the heart of the rationale for freedom of expression 11 This requires courts to carefully
balance the rights of those who have been granted copyright with the rights of users
(which includes the right to free expression) whose communicative actions are restricted
by virtue of the grant of copyright. The Supreme Court of Canada recently commented on
this delicate balance in Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v SODRAC 2003 Inc.:
The Copyright Act strikes a careful balance between promoting the public interest in the encouragement and dissemination of creative works and obtaining a just reward for creators: Théberge v. Galerie d’Art du Petit Champlain inc., 2002 SCC 34 (CanLII), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 336, at para. 30. To tilt the balance too far towards protection of creators’ rights would undermine the right of users to access and work with creative materials. To tilt it too far towards access, on the other hand, would fail to provide a just reward to creators, leading authors and their supporters to under-invest in
10 United Airlines, Inc. v Cooperstock, 2017 FC 616 at para 16.11 (Carys J. Craig, "Putting the Community in Communication: Dissolving the Conflict between Freedom of Expression and Copyright (2006) 56 University of Toronto Law Journal 75 at 110. See also David Fewer, “Constitutionalizing Copyright: Freedom of Expression and the Limits of Copyright in Canada” (1997) 55:2 U Toronto Fac L Rev 175; Jane Bailey, “Deflating the Michelin Man” in Michael Geist (ed), In the Public Interest (Irwin Law 2005); Bita Amani, “Copyright and Freedom of Expression: Fair Dealing Between Work and Play” in Rosemary J Coombe, Darren Wershler & Martin Zellinger (eds), Dynamic Fair Dealing: Creating Canadian Culture Online (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013).
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producing and distributing their works. At both ends of the spectrum, the public loses some of the benefit of creative works: David Vaver, Intellectual Property Law: Copyright, Patents, Trade-marks (2nd ed. 2011), at p. 60; Théberge, at para. 31.12
10. The need for such care in interpreting the Copyright Act is evident in light of the
nature of copyright. Inherently, by granting a certain level of exclusivity of use to the
copyright owner, copyright infringes on the expressive freedom of everyone else.
Freedom of expression is thus inextricably wound up in the interpretation and application
of copyright law, as those who might otherwise wish to express themselves in a certain
manner may be restricted from doing so where a copyright exists over that manner of
expression. This give-and-take informs the balance reflected in the Copyright Act and the
balance that must inform its interpretation and application.
B. The Fair Dealing Provisions Codify Users’ Rights
11. Fair dealing has been an important part of Canada’s copyright scheme since its
earliest codification. The Copyright Act of 1921 included the following provision for fair
dealing:
16. (1) Copyright in a work shall be deemed to be infringed by any person who, without the consent of the owner of the copyright, does anything the sole right to do which is by this Act conferred on the owner of the copyright:
Provided that the following acts shall not constitute an infringement of copyright:
(i) Any fair dealing with any work for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, review, or newspaper summary;
12. In CCH, supra, the Supreme Court of Canada described fair dealing as an integral
part of the Copyright Act, not a “loophole” or even merely a defence, but a user’s right. In
order to maintain the proper balance between the rights of a copyright owner and users’
12 Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v SODRAC 2003 Inc., 2015 SCC 57 at para 145.
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rights, fair dealing must not be interpreted restrictively, but rather given the fair and
balanced reading that befits remedial legislation.13
13. In SOCAN v. Bell Canada the Court clarified that the analytic framework for
understanding copyright was no longer the “earlier, author-centric view which focused on
the exclusive right of authors and copyright owners to control how their works were used
in the marketplace”, where “any benefit the public might derive from the copyright system
was only ‘a fortunate by-product of private entitlement’.“14 Instead, the modern focus is
on furthering the public interest through a proper balance. The users’ right of “fair dealing,”
interpreted liberally, is one of the tools the Court identified for achieving that balance.15
14. Parliament began to address the issue of expanding the fair dealing provisions in
2010 in Bill C-32, The Copyright Modernization Act. Bill C-32 included parody and satire,
as well as education, as new categories of fair dealing.16 In the textbook Radical
Extremism to Balanced Copyright, edited in response to Bill C-32, Graham Reynolds
commented on the then-proposed amendments as follows:
Acts relating to the transformative use of existing expression provide significant benefits to Canadian society. Perhaps most notably they promote values underlying the constitutionally protected right to freedom of expression.17
15. In RJR Macdonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General) the Supreme Court of
Canada noted that “the search for political, artistic and scientific truth, the protection of
individual autonomy and self-development, and the promotion of public participation in
the democratic process” are at the heart of our right to freedom of expression.18
13 CCH, supra, para. 4814 [2012] 2 SCR 326 para 915 SOCAN, supra, para 1116 Bill C-32, An Act to amend the Copyright Act, Third Session, Fortieth Parliament (first reading
2 June 2010)17 Graham Reynolds, “Towards a Right to Engage in the Fair Transformative Use of Copyright
Protected Expression”, in Michael Geist ed, Radical Extremism to Balanced Copyright(Toronto: Irwin Law, 2010) 395 at 397.
18 RJR Macdonald Inc. v Canada (Attorney General), [1995] 3 SCR 199 at para 72.
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Expansion of fair dealing purposes to include parody, satire and education supports these
values.
16. Though Bill C-32 did not pass due to the change of government, the very similar
Bill C-11, the Copyright Modernization Act, was passed in 2012.19 Bill C-11 replaced s.
29 of the Copyright Act with the following, which remains the operable fair dealing
provision:
29. Fair dealing for the purpose of research, private study, education, parody or satire does not infringe copyright.20
17. Parliamentary discussions about the addition of the parody and satire categories
of fair dealing were, on the whole, uncontroversial and received positively. Generally, the
exceptions for parody and satire were accepted as beneficial to artists.21 They were
largely praised as supporting creators and empowering individuals to engage in the
creative process without fear of being sued,22 and heralded as ensuring that “creativity
and innovation continue to contribute to our lively Canadian cultural life and Canada's
economic future”.23 The parody and satire provisions were viewed as an
acknowledgement of the “importance of these acts in the creative process.”24 Moreover,
there was concern that, without these provisions, the uncertainty about what satirical use
could be made of copyrighted material would cause a chilling effect on free speech, and
specifically on political speech.25
18. These observations about the anticipated public interest benefits of the new
categories of fair dealing are entirely in line with the Supreme Court’s characterization of
fair dealing as a user’s right. They also reflect the Court’s comments about the public
19 Bill C-11, Copyright Modernization Act, SC 2012, c 20 (assented to 29 June 2012).20 Ibid, s 21. This provision is identical to that proposed in the 2010 Bill C-32 and, therefore,
Hansard and committee discussions with respect to the fair dealing provisions from both bills are relevant here.
21 House of Commons Debates, 41st Parl, 1st Sess, Vol 146 No 51 (22 November 2011) at 3417. 22 Legislative Committee on Bill C-32, 40th Parl 3rd Sess, CC32, No 005 (1 December 2010) at 923 House of Commons Debates, 41st Parl, 1st Sess, Vol 146 No 76 (8 February 2012) at 5036. 24 House of Commons Debates, 41st Parl, 1st Sess, Vol 146 No 78 (10 February 2012) at 5149.25 Legislative Committee on Bill C-32, 40th Parl 3rd Sess, CC32 No 13 (10 February, 2011) at 12
(Mr. John Barrack (Chief Operating Officer and Chief Legal Officer, Canadian Media Production Association)).
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interest benefits of users’ rights, including in its decisions in SOCAN, supra and Alberta
(Education) v. Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency26 which were released at about the
same time as the legislation was before Parliament.
C. Interpreting Fair Dealing Requires Consideration of Charter Values
i) Parody is an inherently expressive act
19. Charter values – particularly, in this context, expressive freedom – and the general
legislative context are highly relevant to the interpretation and application of the parody
category of fair dealing. Phelan J. does not adequately consider these interpretive factors
in his decision. As a result of his failure to give due consideration to Charter values and
the purpose and intent of the Copyright Act and fair dealing in particular, Phelan J. arrived
at an interpretation of parody that guts the purpose and rationale behind fair dealing. It
restrictively interprets parody, fails to respect the legislative intent to balance the rights of
copyright owners with those of users, and chills critical commentary.
20. While this appeal does not involve a Charter challenge to the Copyright Act, the
fact that parody is an expressive act must inevitably form part of the interpretive context
that a court considers. As Phelan J. correctly observes, the interpretive task is to construe
statutory provisions “in their entire context and in their grammatical and ordinary sense
harmoniously with the scheme of the Act, the object of the Act and the intention of
Parliament.”27 At a minimum this would require a court to ask itself how the public interest
values attached to copyright that are identified in the jurisprudence are advanced by the
user right of parody, requiring meaningful consideration of parody’s distinctive expressive
characteristics.
21. Phelan J. discusses whether the web site constitutes “parody” and whether it
constitutes “fair dealing” within the meaning of the Copyright Act. However, he fails to
consider how his interpretation affects the broader purposes of the Act (in terms of the
26 [2012] 2 SCR 34527 Reasons para. 110
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creation and dissemination of expression), or the role of parody as a balance to the power
of owners of copyright.
22. These issues should have been inherent in the interpretive exercise undertaken in
the court below because of the nature of copyright and the rights – of both creators and
users – that it grants. By granting a certain level of exclusivity of use to the copyright
owner, copyright necessarily limits the expressive freedom of the rest of the public. The
breadth or narrowness of the interpretation of “parody” and “fair dealing” will inevitably
have an impact on the ambit of the expression promoted by the Copyright Act. It is no
accident that discussions at the Parliamentary Committee considering Bill C-11 linked the
parody exception to free speech and specifically political speech. 28
ii) The Ambiguity of the Fair Dealing Provision Requires Consideration of Charter Values
23. The Supreme Court of Canada set out the role of Charter values in statutory
interpretation in Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership v Rex. There, the Court held that
where legislation permits two different, yet equally plausible, interpretations, each of
which is equally consistent with the apparent purpose of the statute, it is appropriate to
prefer the interpretation that accords with Charter principles:
Statutory enactments embody legislative will. They supplement, modify or supersede the common law. More pointedly, when a statute comes into play during judicial proceedings, the courts (absent any challenge on constitutional grounds) are charged with interpreting and applying it in accordance with the sovereign intent of the legislator. In this regard, although it is sometimes suggested that “it is appropriate for courts to prefer interpretations that tend to promote those [Charter] principles and values over interpretations that do not” (Sullivan, supra, at p. 325), it must be stressed that, to the extent this Court has recognized a “Charter values” interpretive principle, such principle can only receive application in circumstances of genuine ambiguity, i.e., where a statutory provision is subject to differing, but equally plausible, interpretations.29
28 Supra. footnote 2429 Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership v Rex, 2002 SCC 42 at para 62
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24. Recently, in Quebec (Commission des normes, de l’équité, de la santé et de la
sécurité du travail) v Caron, the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed the application of
the Charter as an interpretive principle:
As this Court explained in Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership v. Rex, 2002 SCC 42 (CanLII), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 559, the “Chartervalues” interpretive principle serves a narrow purpose: when faced with two interpretations — one compliant with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (“Canadian Charter”), the other infringing it — courts can apply the presumption of compliance with the Canadian Charter to read the statute in a manner respectful of the Charter value in question. This allows the statute to remain in force — untouched — and interpreted such that it complies with the Canadian Charter. This principle, however, does not allow the courts to generate in the name of Charter values an interpretation unsupported by the text of the statute (Bell ExpressVu, at para. 62, R. v. Clarke, 2014 SCC 28 (CanLII), [2014] 1 S.C.R. 612, at para. 12).30
25. Phelan J. should have considered the impact of his interpretation of “fair dealing in
parody” on expressive freedom even without needing to consider the issue of ambiguity,
since, as noted above, the issue arises from the very nature of balance under the
Copyright Act and from the fundamental character of parody as an act of mockery or
criticism. However, to the extent that ambiguity is required to unlock Charter values as
an interpretive tool, ambiguity in s. 29 of the Act abounds.
26. The Copyright Act contains no definition for parody or satire. It merely lists these
terms among the other categories of fair dealing:
29. Fair dealing for the purpose of research, private study, education, parody or satire does not infringe copyright.31
27. This lack of definition results in ambiguity as to the meaning of the categories of
fair dealing. Phelan J. acknowledged the ambiguity inherent in the fair dealing provision,
stating that the legislation is silent as to the content, meaning, or scope of parody. He
30 Quebec (Commission des normes, de l’équité, de la santé et de la sécurité du travail) v Caron,
2018 SCC 3 at para 61.31 Copyright Act, RSC 1985, c C-42, s 29.
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then went on to make numerous findings about the nature of parody that are not grounded
in the text of the statutory provision on its face.
28. First, relying on a decision of the European Court of Justice that concerned a
specific parody exception in Belgian copyright law, Phelan J. found that parody should be
understood as having two basic elements: the evocation of an existing work while
exhibiting noticeable differences and the expression of mockery or humour.32 He also
found that parody does not require the expression of mockery or humour to be directed
at the exact thing being parodied.33 Neither of these findings arises out of the text of the
statutory provision or is otherwise self-evident or without plausible alternative. Both
require the judge to engage in statutory interpretation with reference to relevant
interpretive factors outside the text. There can be no doubt that s. 29 is ambiguous.
29. This ambiguity engaged the requirement to consider Charter values in coming to
an appropriate interpretation and application of s. 29. At the very least, in giving the
section a proper contextual reading, Phelan J. should have considered what parody does
and how that advances the goals of the Copyright Act. He did not. Instead he opted to
interpret s. 29 in a narrow and decontextualized manner that gave undue weight to the
interests of copyright owners at the expense of users’ rights. This resulted in a conclusion
inconsistent with Charter values, the Act’s scheme and object, and Parliament’s intention.
iii) Interpretive Errors Below
30. Although as a matter of form the trial judgment sets out the relevant case law,
including the relevant tests and the factors to be considered, substantively the analysis
fails entirely to preserve the balance required by the Supreme Court’s precedents and in
the process allows copyright to become a tool to suppress rather than to encourage
critical expression.
31. The reasons from the Court below cite the relevant passages from the leading
cases and adopt the two-stage analysis suggested in CCH, first formulating a definition
32 Reasons at para 119.33 Reasons at para 119.
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of parody to determine whether the website fits within its parameters and then examining
the website in light of the six non-exclusive factors set out in CCH as a possible
framework for determining whether a specific example of a permitted category of dealing
is “fair.”34
32. However, the Court in CCH explicitly warned that each fair dealing case is different
and not all factors will arise in all cases. Further, at the time of the decision in CCH,
parody was not as yet a permitted category of dealing. The types of factors that would
govern whether use of copyrighted material in a parody on a website was “fair” are by
their nature different from those that would govern whether use of a copyrighted legal
decision for research by photocopying was “fair.”
(a) The Six Factors: Purpose
33. The first of the six factors considered by Phelan J. was “purpose,” or as he
characterized it, the “true purpose or intent” of the website. Remarkably, in that
discussion, he never asked himself what was the purpose of parody itself or of the parody
provision in s. 29. This is all the more remarkable because in defining parody, Phelan J.
relied in part on the European Union Court of Justice case of Deckmyn v. Vandersteen.
35 Deckmyn explicitly stated that one of the values underlying the parody exception was
freedom of expression36 and further stated:
“The interpretation of the concept of parody must in any case enable the effectiveness of the exception thereby established to be safeguarded and its purpose to be observed.” (at para 23)
34. Rather than considering the nature or purpose of parody, Phelan J.’s discussion
of the purpose of the website turns instead on his own subjective view of humour:
As the Defendant pointed out during the trial, UNTIED.com has long claimed to be a “parody” website. However, the Defendant did not satisfy the Court that there was ever any intent for humour – rather, the Defendant’s intent was to embarrass and punish United for its perceived wrongdoings. As discussed above, parody must include
34 Reasons paras. 109-140
35 Deckmyn v. Vandersteen36 Deckmyn, para. 25
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some element of humour or mockery – if extended too far, what may be designed in jest as parody may simply become defamatory.37
35. Not only is this conclusion inconsistent with Phelan J.’s own adopted definition of
parody as involving humour or mockery, it flat out contradicts the accepted understanding
of the aspect of the Deckmyn case upon which his definition is based:
As to the meaning of ‘parody’, the Court said that a parody must ‘evoke an existing work while being noticeably different from it’, and must ‘constitute an expression of humour or mockery’. The reference to ‘mockery’ will presumably make up for any humour deficit in putative parodies: often cruel mockery can be decidedly unfunny.38 [emphasis added]
36. More fundamentally, Phelan J.’s focus on humour only, represents a restrictive
interpretation of parody that is inconsistent with the policy behind fair dealing. The
purpose of adding parody as a category of fair dealing was to promote cultural growth
and free speech – particularly, political speech – which can only occur when individuals
are able to comment on and critique the status quo without fear of retaliation and
suppression. Requiring parody to meet a subjective characterization of “humour”
effectively removes from the protection of fair dealing any biting commentary, causing a
chilling effect on any criticism of existing political or commercial structures. Such a
restrictive approach to parody stifles free expression and hinders cultural growth, in direct
opposition to the policy goals of fair dealing.
37. Similarly, in taking the restrictive view that the appellant’s “real purpose or motive
in appropriating the copyright works was to defame or punish the [respondent]” and that
this could not constitute parody,39 Phelan J. effectively turns copyright into a tool for
censorship. He appears to assume that parody cannot malign or otherwise treat harshly
or harm a copyright owner, a notion for which there is no basis within the parameters of
Canada’s copyright regime. Indeed, it is in precisely such cases that a copyright owner is
most likely to object to a particular use, and so least likely to license it. If speech is
37 Reasons at para 124.38 Graeme W. Austin, “EU and US Perspectives on Fair Dealing for the Purpose of Parody or
Satire” (2016) 39(2) UNSW LJ 684 at 695-696.39 Reasons at para 125.
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otherwise lawful (e.g. non-defamatory, not hate speech or obscenity, etc.), then refusing
to find fair dealing where use may be harsh or otherwise hurtful forecloses lawful speech.
Copyright should not be used as a tool of censorship to silence lawful criticism. Such an
approach is completely contrary to the public purposes of copyright as articulated by the
Supreme Court of Canada (i.e. encouraging the creation and dissemination of works) and
disregards the public’s right to free expression.
(b) The Six Factors: Other Factors”
38. Phelan J’s treatments of the CCH categories of “amount of dealing” and “character
of dealing” take an abstract perspective, unrelated to the nature of parody or the purpose
of copyright. In both cases Phelan J. found that the character of the dealing and the
amount taken were substantial. The colours, layout and logos were copied and the
website was widely distributed over the internet.
39. These factors were both deemed very important by Phelan J, though he never
considered either factor in light of either the characteristics of parody or the nature of
communication over the Internet. It is the nature of parody to appropriate a substantial
amount of the copyrighted material being parodied and it is the nature of communication
over the Internet that it is circulated widely. In both respects that is the whole point of the
exercise. To insist on a parody that does not closely resemble the original or that is not
widely distributed is to negate the very purpose of the exception and render it all but
illusory, particularly in the digital age. Moreover, to find that a parody is less likely to be
fair simply because it is available online would be to restrict fair dealing for parodies in
digital media, contrary to the principle of technological neutrality endorsed by the
Supreme Court. 40
40. Particular factors that are sensible indicia of fair dealing in the context of research
by photocopying a court case become inconsistent with the very purpose of the exception
40 SOCAN v. Canadian Association of Internet Providers [2004] 2 SCR 427, para. 8; Bell v.
SOCAN, supra. para. 43
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and with the Charter value of expressive freedom when applied in mechanical fashion to
the very different use of parody on the internet.
41. A further factor from CCH considered by Phelan J was “alternatives to dealing.”
Under this rubric, he found that the defendant could have conveyed his messages about
the plaintiff by means other than substantially copying the copyrighted material.41 Once
again, this is an analytic category whose relevance depends on the nature of the work
being analyzed. Where the issue is a work that reduces demand for the copyrighted
material by competing with it, the question of alternatives to the copying is meaningful.
Where the work in question is transformative, as in the case of parody, the considerations
are decidedly different.
42. Fair dealing for the purpose of parody is not a defence, but a right, and must be
balanced against the limited rights of copyright owners. As such, owners must not be in
a position to censor a user’s chosen mode of expression. The effect of Phelan J’s finding
that there were alternative means to make the Defendant’s points is to turn parody into a
means of communication of last resort.
43. The final factor considered by Phelan J was “effect of the dealing on the work” 42.
Under this rubric Phelan J. found that the effect of the work was not in its criticism of the
Plaintiff, but in the confusion it caused in the minds of customers who might believe they
were interacting with the Plaintiff. Whatever the substantive merits of this observation, it
is submitted that it is entirely irrelevant to a discussion of harm to any interest protected
under the Copyright Act. Others have responded with respect to specific findings in the
Reasons regarding trade marks and passing off. This particular finding cannot be
sustained under a copyright analysis.
D. Proper Interpretation of Fair Dealing
44. Courts have consistently emphasized the importance of applying a broad, liberal
interpretation to fair dealing provisions as a whole to ensure that users’ rights are not
41 Reasons paras. 131-13442 Reasons paras. 137-140
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unduly restrained and are appropriately balanced with the rights of copyright owners. This
approach properly considers Charter values – namely, freedom of expression – on the
“users’ rights” side of the equation, thereby giving due weight to what Théberge
recognized were limited rights granted by copyright. Phelan J.’s failure to consider Charter
values resulted in an approach to fair dealing generally, and parody in particular, that
destroys its principled basis.
45. Moreover, mere lip service to the rhetoric of users’ rights fails to accord due weight
to judicial recognition of these rights, and falls short of acknowledging the role that they
play in service of the purpose of copyright law.
46. Phelan J. also fails to consider the purposes and goals of the copyright scheme
more broadly or the public interest. In discussing the interests of users, Phelan J. gives
no consideration to the public’s interest in the appellant’s expressive activities – both in
the parody itself, and in the information that it conveys. The purpose of copyright is to
balance the rights of users and creators. Society, in a general sense, is a “user” in this
approach, which imports the public interest as a relevant contextual factor in the
interpretive exercise. Phelan J.’s overly restrictive approach to fair dealing, which favours
the copyright owner over the user, harms the public at large, not only the appellant.
Charter values are the key to effecting the goals of the copyright scheme and adequately
protecting the public interest.
47. A proper exercise of statutory interpretation, in accordance with Charter values,
legislative intent and precedent, would have resulted in a broad interpretation of fair
dealing generally, and parody in particular. It would also allow for an assessment of
fairness that leaves room for critical and mocking parody and does not give undue
preference to the commercial interests of copyright owners. Had Phelan J. properly
interpreted the parody category of fair dealing, the appellant’s website – which uses
parody in order to sharply criticize a large commercial entity, without obtaining any
commercial gain itself – would have qualified as “mockery” that was fair in light of all the
relevant factors and would therefore have been protected as fair dealing.
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48. With the purpose of the dealing properly defined, it would have been clear that the
character and amount of the dealing was fair in light of that purpose; that the nature of
the relevant works as commercial source-indicators made them apt for that purpose; that
any available alternatives would have been a less effective means to communicate the
critique; that effect of the parodic dealing, while potentially harmful to commercial
reputation, would cause no relevant harm to the market for the copyright works as such.
In short, the defendant’s use would and should have been held to be fair dealing—a
finding consistent with Charter values and the defendant’s right to free expression.
49. Such an interpretation would also be consistent with the ejusdem generis principle
of statutory construction. Ejusdem generis provides that where a statutory provision lists
a series of particular items that share a common characteristic of some kind, including or
followed by a general term, the scope of that general term is limited by the common
characteristics of the class or genus of the particularized items that precede or surround
it. In such a list, the class first mentioned is regarded as the most comprehensive
expression of the class, and the general words that follow should be given a more limited
meaning consistent with the common characteristic uniting or defining the class or genus.
In short, items listed together should be read together as a class, and any one ambiguous
phrase should be interpreted with reference to its specific context.43
50. Here, parody was added to a list of existing categories of fair dealing. It should
therefore be read together with the other listed categories, including notably, criticism and
review, and should be interpreted with reference to the other items with which it is listed.
Judicial interpretation of other categories of fair dealing, and fair dealing more generally,
therefore apply equally to an interpretation of parody. It should similarly be interpreted
broadly and liberally, with a view to protecting the delicate balance users’ rights and
copyright owners’ rights. Phelan J. failed to interpret parody in this manner. He therefore
failed to arrive at a conclusion consistent with Charter values and the protection of free
expression.
43 Persaud v Suedat, 2012 ONSC 5232 at para 34; Ontario (Ministry of Labour) v Magna Seating
Inc., 2015 ONCJ 7 at para 108. See also Ermineskin Indian Band and Nation v Canada, 2009 SCC 9 at para 109
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PART V: LIST OF AUTHORITIES
CASES
1. Théberge v. Galérie d’Art du Petit Champlain Inc., [2002] 2 SCR 336
2. SOCAN v. Bell Canada [2012] 2 SCR 326
3. CCH v. Law Society of Upper Canada, [2004] 1 SCR 339
4. United Airlines, Inc. v. Cooperstock, 2017 FC 616
5. RJR Macdonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1995] 3 SCR
6. Alberta (Education) v. Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency {f.n. [2012] 2 SCR 345
7. Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. SODRAC 2003 Inc., 2015 SCC 57
8. Bell ExpressVu Limited Partnership v. Rex, 2002 SCC 42 at para 62
9. Deckmyn v. Vandersteen, Court of Justice of the European Union, Grand Chamber, Case C-201/13 (3 September 2014)
10.SOCAN v. Canadian Association of Internet Providers [2004] 2 SCR 427
11.Persaud v. Suedat, 2012 ONSC 5232
12.Ontario (Ministry of Labour) v. Magna Seating Inc., 2015 ONCJ 7
13.Ermineskin Indian Band and Nation v. Canada, 2009 SCC 9
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OTHER AUTHORITIES
1. Bill C-32, An Act to amend the Copyright Act, Third Session, Fortieth Parliament (first reading 2 June 2010)
2. Graham Reynolds, “Towards a Right to Engage in the Fair Transformative Use of Copyright Protected Expression”, in Michael Geist ed, Radical Extremism to Balanced Copyright (Toronto: Irwin Law, 2010) 395 at 397.
3. Bill C-11, Copyright Modernization Act, SC 2012, c 20 (assented to 29 June 2012).
4. House of Commons Debates, 41st Parl, 1st Sess, Vol 146 No 51 (22 November 2011) at 3417.
5. Legislative Committee on Bill C-32, 40th Parl 3rd Sess, CC32, No 005 (1 December 2010) at 9
6. House of Commons Debates, 41st Parl, 1st Sess, Vol 146 No 76 (8 February 2012) at 5036.
7. House of Commons Debates, 41st Parl, 1st Sess, Vol 146 No 78 (10 February 2012) at 5153
8. House of Commons Debates, 41st Parl, 1st Sess, Vol 146 No 78 (10 February 2012) at 5149.
9. Legislative Committee on Bill C-32, 40th Parl 3rd Sess, CC32 No 13 (10 February, 2011) at 12 (Mr. John Barrack (Chief Operating Officer and Chief Legal Officer, Canadian Media Production Association)).
10.Quebec (Commission des normes, de l’équité, de la santé et de la sécurité du travail) v Caron, 2018 SCC 3 at para 61.
11.Graeme W. Austin, “EU and US Perspectives on Fair Dealing for the Purpose of Parody or Satire” (2016) 39(2) UNSW LJ 684 at 695-696.
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STATUTES
The Copyright Act, 1921, s 16(1)
16. (1) Copyright in a work shall be deemed to be infringed by any person who, without the consent of the owner of the copyright, does anything the sole right to do which is by this Act conferred on the owner of the copyright:
Provided that the following acts shall not constitute an infringement of copyright:
(i) Any fair dealing with any work for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, review, or newspaper summary;
Copyright Act, RSC 1985, c C-42
Fair DealingResearch, private study, etc.
29 Fair dealing for the purpose of research, private study, education, parody or satire does not infringe copyright.
________________________________________
Loi sur le droit d’auteur (L.R.C. (1985), ch. C-42)
Utilisation équitable
Étude privée, recherche, etc.
29 L’utilisation équitable d’une oeuvre ou de tout autre objet du droit d’auteur aux fins d’étude privée, de recherche, d’éducation, de parodie ou de satire ne constitue pas une violation du droit d’auteur.
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